Serif Other Ubvi 3 is a regular weight, narrow, monoline, upright, normal x-height font.
Keywords: headlines, posters, logotypes, packaging, editorial, art deco, modern, elegant, architectural, display impact, deco revival, branding, refined tone, signage, condensed, high-contrast, flared, stylized, geometric.
A condensed serif with a disciplined, largely monoline backbone and selectively flared terminals that read as thin wedge serifs. Stems are straight and vertical, with rounded corners and soft joins that keep the geometry smooth rather than sharp. Counters tend to be tall and narrow (notably in O, Q, and numerals), and curves are drawn with an engineered, almost tubular feel. The overall rhythm is uniform and vertical, while a few distinctive details—such as the Q’s long descending tail and the J’s hooked terminal—add a decorative edge without disrupting consistency.
Best suited for headlines, posters, title treatments, and brand marks where a tall, streamlined silhouette is desirable. It can work for short editorial passages or captions when generous tracking and leading are available, and it excels in packaging and signage contexts that benefit from a polished Art Deco flavor.
The tone is sleek and poised, combining vintage Art Deco cues with a contemporary, editorial crispness. Its narrow proportions and flared finishes evoke signage, fashion, and classic film-era display typography, giving text a refined, slightly theatrical presence.
The design appears intended to deliver an elegant, condensed display voice with subtle decorative serifs—prioritizing verticality, clarity, and a distinctive period-inspired silhouette while remaining clean enough for modern branding and editorial layouts.
Lowercase forms are compact and tidy, with short extenders and simple, legible constructions that keep texture even in longer lines. Numerals follow the same condensed, rounded-rectangle logic and feel well-matched for headings and lockups. The font’s personality comes more from terminal treatment and proportion than from heavy contrast or ornate serif shaping.